The chain and cassette stuff is good (chain tool, lock ring tool and chain whip) but the rest depends on the style of BB and crankset. You've listed tools for two different types. Unless you are removing one type and installing a different type, you won't need all of that.

The chain and cassette stuff is good (chain tool, lock ring tool and chain whip) but the rest depends on the style of BB and crankset. You've listed tools for two different types. Unless you are removing one type and installing a different type, you won't need all of that.

I have a regular GXP bb that will be changed to bb86 otherwise I'm not changing anything on my bike-buils.

The BBT-9 will remove the GXP. BB86 is press fit so no tools are necessary to install. However, GXP is for an English threaded BB shell and BB86 is press fit which requires the frame to have a different BB shell. I don't believe they are interchangeable.

You definitely don't need CWP-7. You do need BBT-9 to remove existing crankarms and you need some more tools (I don't know which ones, depends on your new crankset) to install new crankarms. You also need an 8 mm allen wrench and a torque wrench.

If you are just trying to replace the BB and keep the arms, I think you'll also need a 16 mm allen wrench.

Yep, that's the way it's installed by an experienced, professional mechanic. But no, those are not all the tools. You also need the knowledge to determine compatibility of the parts (as mentioned earlier), to properly use the tools, and to adjust the affected drive train components after you have completed the assembly. The most critical tool is always grey matter, and that's the reason for the disclaimer at the beginning of the video.

p.s. A plastic faced dead blow hammer would work much better than that puny claw hammer.

So I'm not going to be able to remove and install BB, chain and cassette with:

CT3, FR5, SR11 and BBT 90.3?

*I will go to a bicycle workshop like I said for my old BB and crank.

Perhaps I was not direct enough. The part after "...not all the tools" refers to the fact that you have to use your brain as a tool, and I'm not sure you are using that particular tool as well as you could. You need to pay attention to the earlier post below, for example:

Originally Posted by CACycling

The BBT-9 will remove the GXP. BB86 is press fit so no tools are necessary to install. However,GXP is for an English threaded BB shell and BB86 is press fit which requires the frame to have a different BB shell. I don't believe they are interchangeable.

Fortunately, I do have a workingBRAIN like what you suggest and yes I do have a new frame that has a BB86 shell.

All I'm looking for is a yes or no answer and if it's a no then tell me what tools. I obviously wouldn't ask the question if I knew what tools I need. Otherwise you can just say "yes, those are all the tools you need". Telling me I need a brain to take these parts out are a bit insulting. Get off your high horse and just don't reply on the thread for F sakes.

I hope you don't go on telling people they need their hands to switch the channel on the TV, or put the key in the ignition to start the car.

I was not trying to be smart, just pointing out a reality that many do not appreciate. It's all too common that someone gets the right tools and dives in without the knowledge required to do a job properly. Even in my second post I merely suggested that you might want to use your brain better, as you seemed to be missing an important piece of info from anther poster. It is your choice to put that kind of tone to my post.

At the risk of ticking you off further I would point out that when you ask about "remove/install" it is natural for anyone to assume you mean on the same frame. Why would we think it was two different frames when you did not tell us that? You are taking as an insult a caution that was meant to protect you from an expensive mistake.

Your analogies don't quite fit, but I'll use one of them anyway. If someone asked you if a key was all they needed to start a car, wouldn't you want to determine whether they knew enough to drive one before just saying yes? Would it be insulting to point out that they need to practice and know the rules of the road as well? If someone had only driven an automatic shift and asked you if they just needed to use the clutch to drive stick, would "yes" be a good enough answer?